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Solaris 10

list Mike Rowell
Mon, 29 Sep 2008 17:31:40 +0100
Message-Id: <user-b5441384bb63@xymon.invalid>

Dave,

 
Is this box heavily utilized for network processes... 

 
Mike

 
From: Dave Morgan [mailto:user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid] 
Sent: 29 September 2008 17:19
To: user-ae9b8668bcde@xymon.invalid
Subject: Re: [hobbit] Solaris 10

 
Anyone have any suggestions on our issue?  This seems to be happening
only on our Solaris systems.

 
Dave

On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 11:50 AM, Dave Morgan <user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid>
wrote:

Our files are between 20 - 40 MB for the hobbit client data files from
Solaris.  Under the CPU check, it only shows the uptime, total processes
running (about 200) and load.  There is no top for this information.

 
Dave

 
On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 11:39 AM, Rich Smrcina <user-cf452ff334e0@xymon.invalid>
wrote:

Can you quantify 'large'?  Do these Solaris hosts have a large number of
processes running?  The process list is probably the culprit.  If 'top'
(or the solaris equivalent) is being used on the client, then the
process list is essentially being duplicated.  I usually turn it off at
the client end.

Dave Morgan wrote:

We have discovered that when the Solaris 10 Hobbit client sends its data
to the server the file size of the client data/host data is fairly
large.  Is there a way to chuck the data into pieces, or to compress the
data on the client side, prior to sending, and uncompress on the server
side, to parse it in?

Dave

-- 
David S. Morgan CISSP, CCNP

aka: user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid <mailto:user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid>


"When the Winds of Change Blow Hard Enough,
the Most trivial of things can turn into deadly projectiles"


-- 
Rich Smrcina
VM Assist, Inc.
Phone: XXX-XXX-XXXX
Ans Service:  XXX-XXX-XXXX
user-61add9955ef9@xymon.invalid
http://www.linkedin.com/in/richsmrcina

Catch the WAVV!  http://www.wavv.org
WAVV 2009 - Orlando, FL - May 15-19, 2009


-- 
David S. Morgan CISSP, CCNP
aka: user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid

"When the Winds of Change Blow Hard Enough,
the Most trivial of things can turn into deadly projectiles"


-- 
David S. Morgan CISSP, CCNP
aka: user-4691629dd582@xymon.invalid

"When the Winds of Change Blow Hard Enough,
the Most trivial of things can turn into deadly projectiles"


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